Gregory Benford A Hiss of Dragon

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C:\Users\John\Downloads\G\Gregory Benford - A Hiss of Dragon.pdb

PDB Name:

Gregory Benford - A Hiss of Dra

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REAd

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TEXt

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0

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Creation Date:

29/12/2007

Modification Date:

29/12/2007

Last Backup Date:

01/01/1970

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0

A HISS OF DRAGON
By Gregory Benford & Marc Laidlaw
"Incoming Dragon!" Leopold yelled, and ducked to the left. I went right.
Dragons come in slow and easy. A blimp with wings, this one settled down like
a wrinkled brown sky falling. I scrambled over boulders, trying to be
inconspicuous and fast at the same time. It didn't seem like a promising
beginning for a new job.
Leopold and I had been working on the ledge in front of the Dragon's Lair,
stacking berry pods. This Dragon must have flown toward its Lair from the
other side of the mountain spire, so our radio tag on him didn't transmit
through all the rock. Usually they're not so direct. Most Dragons circle their
Lairs a few times, checking for scavengers and egg stealers. If they don't
circle, they're usually too tired. And when they're tired, they're irritable.
Something told me I didn't want to be within reach of this one's throat flame.
I dropped my berrybag rig and went down the rocks feet first. The boulders
were slippery with green moss for about 20 meters below the ledge, so I slid
down on them. I tried to keep the falls to under four meters and banged my
butt when I missed. I could hear Leopold knocking loose rocks on the other
side, moving down toward where our skimmer was parked.
A shadow fell over me, blotting out Beta's big yellow disk. The brown bag
above thrashed its wings and gave a trumpeting shriek. It had caught sight of
the berry bags and knew something was up. Most likely, with its weak eyes, the
Dragon thought the bags were eggers-off season, but what do Dragons know about
seasons? -and would attack them. That was the optimistic theory. The
pessimistic one was that the Dragon had seen one of us. I smacked painfully
into a splintered boulder and glanced up. Its underbelly was heaving, turning
purple: anger. Not a reassuring sign. Eggers don't bother Dragons that much.
Then its wings fanned the air, backwards. It drifted off the ledge, hovering.
The long neck snaked around, and two nearsighted eyes sought mine. The nose
expanded, catching my scent. The Dragon hissed triumphantly.
Our skimmer was set for a fast takeoff. But it was 200 meters down, on the
only wide spot we could find. I made a megaphone of my hands and shouted into
the thin mountain mist, "Leopold! Grab air!"
I jumped down to a long boulder that jutted into space. Below and a little to
the left I could make out the skimmer's shiny wings through the shifting green
fog. I sucked in a breath and ran off the end of the boulder.
Dragons are clumsy at level flight, but they can drop like a brick. The only
way to beat this one down to the skimmer was by falling most of the way.
I banked down, arms out. Our gravity is only a third of Earth normal. Even
when falling, you have time to think things over. I can do the calculations
fast enough-it came out to nine seconds-but getting the count right with a
Dragon on your tail is another matter. I ticked the seconds off and then
popped the chute. It fanned and filled. The skimmer came rushing up, wind
whipped my face. Then my harness jerked me to a halt. I drifted down. I
thumped the release and fell free.
Above me, a trumpeting bellow. Something was coming in at four o'clock and I

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turned, snatching for my blaser. Could it be that fast? But it was Leopold, on
chute. I sprinted for the skimmer. It was pointed along the best outbound
wind, flaps already down, a standard precaution, I belted in, sliding my feet
into the pedals. I caught a dank, foul reek of Dragon. More high shrieking,
closer, Leopold came running up, panting. He wriggled into the rear seat. A
thumping of wings. A ceiling of wrinkled leather. Something hissing overhead.
Dragons don't fly, they float. They have a big green hydrogen-filled dome on
their backs to give them lift. They make the hydrogen in their stomachs and
can dive quickly by venting it out the ass. This one was farting and falling

as we zoomed away. I banked, turned to get a look at the huffing brown
mountain hooting its anger at us, and grinned.
"I take back what I said this morning," Leopold gasped. "You'll draw full
wages and commissions, from the start."
I didn't say anything. I'd just noticed that somewhere back there I had pissed
my boots full.
I covered it pretty well back at the strip. I twisted out of the skimmer and
slipped into the maintenance bay. I had extra clothes in my bag, so I slipped
on some fresh socks and thongs.
When I was sure I smelled approximately human, I tromped back out to Leopold.
I was damned if I would let my morning's success be blotted out by an
embarrassing accident. It was a hirer's market these days. My training at crop
dusting out in the flat farmlands had given me an edge over the other guys who
had applied. I was determined to hang on to this job.
Leopold was the guy who "invented" the Dragons, five years ago. He took a life
form native to Lex, the bloats, and tinkered with their DNA. Bloats are
balloonlike and nasty. Leopold made them bigger, tougher, and spliced in a
lust for thistleberries that makes Dragons hoard them compulsively. It had
been a brilliant job of engineering. The Dragons gathered thistleberries, and
Leopold stole them from the Lairs.
Thistleberries are a luxury good, high in protein, and delicious. The market
for them might collapse if Lex's economy got worse-the copper seams over in
Bahinin had run out last month. This was nearly the only good flying job left.
More than anything else, I wanted to keep flying. And not as a crop duster.
Clod-grubber work is a pain.
Leopold was leaning against his skimmer, a little pale, watching his men husk
thistleberries. His thigh muscles were still thick; he was clearly an airman
by ancestry, but he looked tired.
"Goddamn," he said. "I can't figure it out, kid. The Dragons are hauling in
more berries than normal. We can't get into the Lairs, though. You'd think it
was mating season around here, the way they're attacking my men."
"Mating season? When's that?"
"Oh, in about another six months, when the puffbushes bloom in the treetops.
The pollen sets off the mating urges in Dragons-steps up their harvest, but it
also makes 'em meaner."
"Great," I said. "I'm allergic to puffbush pollen. I'll have to fight off
Dragons with running eyes and a stuffy nose."
Leopold shook his head absently; he hadn't heard me. "I can't understand it-
there's nothing wrong with my Dragon designs."
"Seems to me you could have toned down the behavior plexes," I said. "Calm
them down a bit -I mean, they've outgrown their competition to the point that
they don't even need to be mean anymore. They don't browse much as it is . . .
nobody's going to bother them."
"No way-there's just not the money for it, Drake. Look, I'm operating on the
margin here. My five-year rights to the genetic patents just ran out, and now
I'm in competition with Kwalan Rhiang, who owns the other half of the forest.
Besides, you think gene splicing is easy?"
"Still, if they can bioengineer humans . . . I mean, we were beefed up for
strength and oxy burning nearly a thousand years ago."

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"But we weren't blown up to five times the size of our progenitors, Drake. I
made those Dragons out of mean sons of bitches-blimps with teeth is what they
were. It gets tricky when you mess with the life cycles of something that's
already that unstable. You just don't understand what's involved here."
I nodded. "I'm no bioengineer-granted."
He looked at me and grinned, a spreading warm grin on his deeply lined face.
"Yeah, Drake, but you're good at what you do-really good. What happened today,

well, I'm getting too old for that sort of thing, and' it's happening more and
more often. If you hadn't been there I'd probably be stewing in that Dragon's
stomach right now-
skimmer and all."
I shrugged. That gave me a chance to roll the slabs of muscle in my shoulders,
neck, and pectorals -a subtle advertisement that I had enough to keep a
skimmer aloft for hours.
"So," he continued. "I'm giving you full pilot rank. The skimmer's yours. You
can fly it home tonight, on the condition that you meet me at the Angis Tavern
for a drink later on. And bring your girl Evelaine, too, if you want."
"It's a deal, Leopold. See you there."
I whistled like a dungwarbler all the way home, pedaling my new skimmer over
the treetops toward the city. I nearly wrapped myself in a floating thicket of
windbrambles, but not even this could destroy my good mood.
I didn't notice any Dragons roaming around, though I saw that the treetops had
been plucked of their berries and then scorched. Leopold had at least had the
foresight, when he was gene tinkering, to provide for the thistleberries'
constant replenishment. He gave the Dragons a throat flame to singe the
treetops with, which makes the berries grow quickly. A nice touch.
It would have been simpler, of course, to have men harvest the thistleberries
themselves, but that never worked out, economically. Thistleberries grow on
top of virtually unclimbable thorntrees, where you can't even maneuver a
skimmer without great difficulty. And if a man fell to the ground . . . well,
if it's on the ground, it has spines, that's the rule on Lex. There's nothing
soft to fall on down there. Sky life is more complex than ground life. You can
actually do something useful with sky life-namely, bioengineering. Lex may be
a low-metal world-which means low-technology-but our bioengineers are the
best.
A clapping sound, to the left. I stopped whistling. Down through the greenish
haze I could see a dark form coming in over the treetops, its wide rubbery
wings slapping together at the top of each stroke. A smackwing. Good meat,
spicy and moist. But hard to catch. Evelaine and I had good news to celebrate
tonight; I decided to bring her home smackwing for dinner. I. took the skimmer
down in the path of the smackwing, meanwhile slipping my blaser from its
holster.
The trick to hunting in the air is to get beneath your prey so that you can
grab it while it falls, but this smackwing was flying too low. I headed in
fast, hoping to frighten it into rising above me, but it was no use. The
smackwing saw me, red eyes rolling. It missed a beat in its flapping and dived
toward the treetops. At that instant a snagger shot into view from the topmost
branches, rising with a low farting sound. The smackwing spotted this
blimplike thing that had leaped into its path but apparently didn't think it
too threatening. It swerved about a meter under the bobbing creature-
And stopped flat, in mid-air.
I laughed aloud, sheathing my blaser. The snagger had won his meal like a real
hunter.
Beneath the snagger's wide blimplike body was a dangling sheet of transparent
sticky material. The smackwing struggled in the moist folds as the snagger
drew the sheet upward. To the unwary smackwing that clear sheet must have been
invisible until the instant he flew into it.
Within another minute, as I pedaled past the spot, the snagger had entirely

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engulfed the smackwing and was unrolling its sticky sheet as it drifted back
into the treetops. Pale yellow eyes considered me and rejected the notion of
me as food. A ponderous predator, wise with years.
I flew into the spired city: Kalatin.
I parked on the deck of our apartment building, high above the jumbled wooden
buildings of the city. Now that my interview had been successful, we'd be able

to stay in Kalatin, though I hoped we could find a better apartment. This one
was as old as the city-which in turn had been around for a great deal of the
1200 years humans had been on Lex. As the wood of the lower stories rotted,
and as the building crumbled away, new quarters were just built on top of it
and settled into place. Someday this city would be an archaeologist's dream.
In the meantime, it was an inhabitant's nightmare.
Five minutes later, having negotiated several treacherous ladders and a
splintering shinny pole into the depths of the old building, I crept quietly
to the wooden door of my apartment and let myself in, clutching the mudskater
steaks that I'd picked up on the way home. It was dark and cramped inside, the
smell of rubbed wood strong. I could hear Evelaine moving around in the
kitchen, so I sneaked to the doorway and looked in. She was turned away,
chopping thistleberries with a thorn-knife.
I grabbed her, throwing the steaks into the kitchen, and kissed her.
"Got the job, Evey!" I said. "Leopold took me out himself and I ended up
saving his-"
"It is you!" She covered her nose, squirming away from me. "What is that
smell, Drake?"
"Smell?"
"Like something died. It's all over you."
I remembered the afternoon's events. It was either the smell of Dragon, which
I'd got from scrambling around in a Lair, or that of urine. I played it safe
and said, "I think it's Dragon."
"Well take it somewhere else. I'm cooking dinner."
"I'll hop in the cycler. You can cook up the steaks I
brought, then we're going out to celebrate."
The Angis Tavern is no skiff joint, good for a stale senso on the way home
from work. It's the best. The Angis is a vast old place, perched on a pyramid
of rock. Orange fog nestles at the base, a misty collar separating it from the
jumble of the city below.
Evelaine pedaled the skimmer with me, having trouble in her gown. We made a
wobbly landing on the rickety side deck. It would've been easier to coast down
to the city, where there was more room for a glide approach, but that's
pointless. There are thick cactus and thornbushes around the Angis base, hard
to negotiate at night. In the old days it kept away predators; now it keeps
away the riffraff.
But not completely: two beggars accosted us as we dismounted, offering to
shine up the skimmer's aluminum skin. I growled convincingly at them, and they
skittered away. The Angis is so big, so full of crannies to hide out in, they
can't keep it clear of beggars, I guess.
We went in a balcony entrance. Fat balloons nudged against the ceiling, ten
meters overhead, dangling their cords. I snagged one and stepped off into
space. Evelaine hooked it as I fell. We rode it down, past alcoves set in the
rock wall. Well-dressed patrons nodded as we eased down, the balloon
following. The Angis is a spire, broadening gradually as we descended.
Phosphors cast creamy glows on the tables set into the walls. I spotted
Leopold sprawled in a webbing, two empty tankards lying discarded underneath.
"You're late," he called. We stepped off onto his ledge. Our balloons,
released, shot back to the roof.
"You didn't set a time. Evelaine, Leopold." Nods, intro-
ductory phrases.
"It seems quite crowded here tonight," Evelaine murmured. A plausible social

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remark, except she'd never been to an inn of this class before.
Leopold shrugged. "Hard times mean full taverns. Booze or sensos or tinglers-
pick your poison."
Evelaine has the directness of a country girl and knows her own limitations;
she stuck to a mild tingler. Service was running slow, so I went to log our

orders. I slid down a shinny pole to the first bar level. Mice zipped by me,
eating up tablescraps left by the patrons; it saves on labor. Amid the jam and
babble I placed our order with a steward and turned to go back.
"You looking for work?" a thick voice said.
I glanced at its owner. "No." The man was big, swarthy, and sure of himself.
"Thought you wanted Dragon work." His eyes had a look of distant amusement.
"How'd you know that?" I wasn't known in the city.
"Friends told me."
"Leopold hired me today."
"So I hear. I'll top whatever he's paying."
"I didn't think business was that good."
"It's going to get better. Much better, once Leopold's out of the action. A
monopoly can always sell goods at a higher price. You can start tomorrow."
So this was Kwalan Rhiang. "No thanks. I'm signed up." Actually, I hadn't
signed anything, but there was something about this man I didn't like. Maybe
the way he was so sure I'd work for him.
"Flying for Leopold is dangerous. He doesn't know what he's doing."
"See you around," I said. A senso was starting in a nearby booth. I took
advantage of it to step into the ex-
face, and split open faults. Volcanoes poked up. They belched water and gas
onto the surface, keeping the atmosphere dense. So Lex ended up with low
gravity and a thick atmosphere. Fine, except that Beta's wan light also never
pushed many heavy elements out this far, so Lex is metal-poor. Without iron
and the rest you can't build machines, and without technology you're a
backwater. You sell your tourist attraction-flying-and hope for the best.
One of the offworlders came up to me and said, "You got any sparkers in this
place?"
I shook my head. Maybe he didn't know that getting a sendup by tying your
frontal lobes into an animal's is illegal here. Maybe he didn't care. Ancestor
or not, he just looked like a misshapen dwarf to me, and I walked away.
Evelaine was describing life in the flatlands when I got back. Leopold was
rapt, the worry lines in his face nearly gone. Evelaine does that to people.
She's natural and straightforward, so she was telling him right out that she
wasn't much impressed with city life. "Farmlands are quiet and restful.
Everybody has a job," she murmured. "You're right that getting around is
harder-but we can glide in the updrafts, in summer. It's heaven."
"Speaking of the farmlands," I said, "an old friend of mine came out here five
years ago. He wanted in on your operations."
"I was hiring like crazy five years ago. What was his name?"
"Lorn Kramer. Great pilot."
Leopold shook his head. "Can't remember. He's not with me now, anyway. Maybe
Rhiang got him."
Our drinks arrived. The steward was bribable, though Rhiang was right behind
him.
"You haven't answered my 'gram," Rhiang said directly to Leopold, ignoring us.
I guess he didn't figure I was worth any more time.
"Didn't need to," Leopold said tersely.
"Sell out. I'll give you a good price." Rhiang casually sank his massive flank
on our table edge. "You're getting too old."
Something flickered in Leopold's eyes; he said nothing.
"Talk is," Rhiang went on mildly, "market's falling."
"Maybe," Leopold said. "What you been getting for a kilo?"
"Not saying."

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"Tight lips and narrow minds go together."
Rhiang stood, his barrel chest bulging. "You could use a little instruction in
politeness."

"From you?" Leopold chuckled. "You paid off that patent clerk to release my
gene configs early. Was that polite?"
Rhiang shrugged. "That's the past. The present reality is that there may be an
oversupply of thistleberries. Market isn't big enough for two big operations
like ours. There's too much-"
"Too much of you, that's my problem. Lift off, Rhiang."
To my surprise, he did. He nodded to me, ignored Evelaine; and gave Leopold a
look of contempt. Then he was gone.
I heard them first. We were taking one of the outside walks that corkscrew
around the Angis spire, gawking at the phosphored streets below. A stone slide
clattered behind us. I saw two men duck behind a jutting ledge. One of them
had something in his hand that glittered.
"You're jumpy, Drake," Evelaine said.
"Maybe." It occurred to me that if we went over the edge of this spire,
hundreds of meters into the thorn scrabble below, it would be very convenient
for Rhiang.
"Let's move on."
Leopold glanced at me, then back at the inky shadows. We strolled along the
trail of volcanic rock, part of the natural formation that made the spire.
Rough black pebbles slipped underfoot. In the distant starflecked night,
skylight called and boomed.
We passed under a phosphor. At the next turn Leopold looked back and said, "I
saw one of them. Rhiang's righthand man."
We hurried away. I wished for a pair of wings to get us off this place.
Evelaine understood instantly that this was serious. "There's a split in the
trail ahead," Leopold said. "If they follow, we'll know . . ." He didn't
finish.
We turned. They followed. "I think I know a way to slow them down," I said.
Leopold looked at me. We were trying to avoid slipping in the darkness and yet
make good time. "Collect some of these obsidian frags;" I said.
We got a bundle of them together. "Go on up ahead," I said. We were on a
narrow ledge. I sank back into the shadows and waited. The two men appeared.
Before they noticed me I threw the obsidian high into the air. In low gravity
it takes a long time for them to come back down. In the darkness the two men
couldn't. see them coming.
I stepped out into the wan light. "Hey!" I yelled to them. They stopped,
precisely where I thought they would. "What's going on?" I said, to stall.
The biggest one produced a knife. "This."
The first rock hit, coming down from over a hundred meters above. It slammed
into the boulder next to him. Then three more crashed down, striking the big
one in the shoulder, braining the second. They both crumpled.
I turned and hurried along the path. If they'd seen me throw they'd have had
time to dodge. It was an old schoolboy trick, but it worked.
The implications, though, were sobering. If Rhiang felt this way, my new job
might not last long.
I was bagging berries in the cavernous Paramount Lair when the warning buzzer
in my pocket went off. A Dragon was coming in. I still had time, but not much.
I decided to finish this particular bag rather than abandon the bagging-
pistol. The last bit of fluid sprayed over the heap of berries and began to
congeal instantly, its tremendously high surface tension drawing it around the
irregular pile and sealing perfectly. I holstered the gun, leaving the bag for
later. I turned-
A slow flapping boom. Outside, a wrinkled brown wall.
Well, I'd fooled around long enough-now I dived for safety. The Dragon's Lair
was carpeted with a thick collection of nesting materials. None were very

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pleasant to burrow through, but I didn't have any choice. Behind me I could
hear the Dragon moving around; if I didn't move out of his way in a hurry I

might get stepped on. The emergency chute on my back tangled in a branch, just
as the stench in the Lair intensified. I hurried out of it and went on. I'd
just have to be sure not to fall from any great heights. I didn't worry about
it, because my skimmer was parked on the ledge just outside the Lair.
I stuck my head up through the nest to judge my position. The bulk of the
Dragon was silhouetted against the glare of the sky, which was clear of fog
today. The beast seemed to be preening itself. That was something I never
thought they did outside of the mating season-which was six months away.
I scrambled backward into the nest. The buzzer in my pocket went off again,
though it was supposed to signal just once, for ten seconds. I figured the
thing must have broken. It quieted and I moved on, thinking. For one
thing,.the Dragon that occupied this Lair was supposed to have been far from
home right now-which meant that my guest didn't really belong here. Dragons
never used the wrong
Lair unless it was the mating season.
I frowned. Why did that keep coming up?
Suddenly there was a rush of wind and a low, thrumming sound. The light from
outside was cut off. I poked my head into the open.
Another Dragon was lumbering into the Lair. This was really impossible. 'Iivo
Dragons sharing a Lair-and the wrong one at that! Whatever their reasons for
being here, I was sure they were going to start fighting pretty soon, so I
burrowed deeper, moving toward the nearest wall.
My elbow caught on something. Cloth. I brushed it away, then looked again. A
Dragonrobber uniform like my own. It was directly beneath me, half-buried in
the nesting material. 1 caught my breath, then poked at the uniform. Something
glittered near one empty sleeve: an identification bracelet. I picked it up,
shifted it in the light, and read the name on it: Lorn Kramer.
Lorn Kramer! So he had been in Leopold's group after all. But that still
didn't explain why he left his clothes here.
I tugged at the uniform, dragging it toward me. It was limp, but tangled in
the nest. I jerked harder and some long, pale things rattled out of the
sleeve.
Bones.
I winced. I was suddenly aware that my present situation must be somewhat like
the one that had brought him here.
I looked into the Lair again. One of the Dragons was prodding its snout at the
other, making low, whuffling sounds. It didn't look like a hostile gesture to
me. In fact, it looked like they were playing. The other Dragon wheeled about
and headed for the entrance. The first one followed, and in a minute both of
them had left the Lair again-as abruptly and inexplicably as they had entered
it.
I saw my chance. I ran across the Lair, grabbed my skimmer, and took off. I
moved out, pedaling furiously away from the Dragons, and glanced down.
For a minute I thought I was seeing things. The landscape below me was
blurred, though the day had been clear and crisp when I'd flown into the Lair.
I blinked. It didn't go away, but got clearer. There was a cloud of yellowish
dust spreading high above the forest, billowing up and around the Lairs I
could see. Where had it come from?
I sneezed, passing through a high plume of the dust. Then my eyes began to
sting and I sneezed again. I brought the skimmer out of the cloud, but by this
time my vision was distorted with tears. I began to cough and choke ail at
once, until the skimmer faltered as I fought to stay in control, my eyes
streaming.
I knew what that dust was.
Nothing affected me as fiercely as puffbush pollen: it was the only thing I
was really allergic to.

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I, stopped pedaling.

It affected Dragons, too. It set off their mating urges.
But where was the damned stuff coming from? It was six months out of season. I
started pedaling again, legs straining. I turned to get a better view.
A flash of light needled past my head, and I knew. Three skimmers shot into
view from around the spire of Paramount Lair. The tip of one of my wings was
seared away by a blaser. My skimmer lurched wildly, but I held on and brought
it up just as the first skimmer came toward me. Its pilot was wearing a
filtermask. Attached to the skimmer were some empty bags that must have held
the puffbush pollen. But what I was looking at was the guy's blaser. It was
aimed at me.
I reeled into an updraft, pulling over my attacker, grabbing for my own
blaser. The skimmer soared beneath me, then careened into a sharp turn. It was
too sharp. The guy turned straight into the path of his companion. The two
skimmers crashed together with a satisfying sound, then the scattered parts
and pilots fell slowly toward the treetops. Seconds later, the forest
swallowed them up.
I looked for the third man, just as he came up beside me. The bastard was
grinning, and I recognized that grin. It was Kwalan Rhiang's.
He nodded once, affably, and before I could remember to use my blaser, Rhiang
took a single, precise shot at the chainguard of my skimmer. The pedals rolled
uselessly. I was out of control. Rhiang lifted away and cruised out of sight,
leaving me flailing at the air in a ruined skimmer.
I had exactly one chance, and this was to get back to the Lair I'd just
abandoned. I was slightly higher than the opening, so I glided in, backpedaled
for the drop-and crashed straight into the wall, thanks to my ruined pedals.
But I made it in alive, still able to stand up and brush the dirt from my
uniform. I stood at the mouth of the Lair, staring out over the forest,
considering the long climb that lay below me.
And just then the Dragons returned.
Not one, this time-not even two. Five shadows wheeled overhead; five huge
beasts headed toward the Lair where I was standing. And finally, five Dragons
dropped right on top of me.
I leapt back just in time, scrambling into the blue shadows as the first
Dragon thumped to the ledge. It waddled inside, reeking. I moved back farther.
Its four friends were right behind. I kept moving back.
Well, at least now I knew why they were doing this. Kwalan Rhiang had been
setting off their mating urges by dusting the Dragons with puffbush-pollen,
messing up their whole life cycle, fooling with their already nasty tempers.
It made sense. Anything less subtle might have gotten Rhiang into a lot of
trouble. As it was, he'd doubtless fly safely home, waiting for Leopold's
Dragons to kill off Leopold's men.
Out in the cavernous Lair, the Dragons began to move around, prodding at each
other like scramble mice, hooting their airy courting sounds. The ground shook
with their movement. Two seemed to be females, which suggested that I might
look forward to some fighting between the other three. Great.
I fumbled at my pockets for something that might be of help. My warning buzzer
had shattered in my rough landing; I threw it away. I still had my bagging-
gun, but it wouldn't do me a lot of good. My blaser seemed okay. I unholstered
it and began to move along the wall. If I went carefully, I might be able to
get onto the outer ledge.
Two of the males were fighting now, lunging, the sounds of their efforts
thundering around me. I made a short run and gained a bit of ground. One of
the Dragons retreated from the battle-apparently the loser. I groaned. He had
moved directly in my path.
A huge tail pounded at the ground near me and a female started backing my way,
not looking at me. There was no place to go. And I was getting tired of this.
I decided to warn her off. I made a quick shot at her back,

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nipping her in the hydrogen dome. She squawked and shuffled away, confused. I
went on.
I stopped. There was a hissing sound behind me. Turning, I could see nothing
but the Dragon I'd just shot. She didn't appear to be making the sound, but it
was coming from her direction. I peered closer, through the blue gloom, and
then saw where the noise was coming from.
Her hydrogen dome was deflating.
I nearly laughed aloud. Here was the answer to my problem. I could deflate the
Dragons, leaving them stranded, unable to fly, while I climbed down this spire
without fear of pursuit. I lifted my blaser and aimed at the male nearest the
rear of the Lair. A near miss, then a hit. Hydrogen hissed out of his dome as
well. Then I got the second female, and another male who was directly across
from me.
One Dragon to go. The others were roaring and waddling. The Lair was full of
the hissing sound.
I turned to my last opponent. He wasn't looking my way, but he was blocking my
exit. I moved in closer and lifted my blaser.
Then he saw me.
I flung myself aside just as he bellowed and pounded forward, filling the
entrance to the Lair, blocking out the sunlight. I rolled into the thorny
nest. I fired once, hitting him in the snout. He swung his head toward me,
pushing me around toward the outer ledge, bellowing. I fired again, and once
more missed his hydrogen dome. I made a dash around his rump just as he spun
my way, tail lashing against me. His dark little eyes narrowed as he sighted
me, and his throat began to ripple.
My time was up. He was about to blast me with his throat flame.
The Dragon opened his mouth, belched hydrogen, and ignited it by striking a
spark from his molars-
That was the wrong thing to do.
I saw it coming and ducked.
The cavern shuddered and blew up. The orange explosion rumbled out, catching
the Dragons in a huge rolling flame. I buried myself in the nesting strands
and grabbed onto the lashing tail of my attacker. Terrified by the blast, he
took off. My eyebrows were singed, my wrists burned.
The world spun beneath me. A tendril of smoke drifted into view just below,
mingled with flaming bits of nesting material and the leathery hide of
Dragons. Then my view spun again and I was looking at the sky. It gradually
dawned on me that I was clinging to a Dragon's tail.
It occurred to the Dragon at the same time. I saw his head swing toward me,
snapping angrily. His belly was flashing purple. Every now and then he let out
a tongue of flame, but he couldn't quite get at me. Meanwhile, I held on for
my life.
The Dragon flew on, but my weight seemed to be too much for it. We were
dropping slowly toward the trees, as easily as if I'd punctured his bony dome
with my blaser. But it would be rough landing. And I'd. have to deal with the
Dragon afterward.
I spied something rising from the trees below us. It shot swiftly into the air
after a high-flying bulletbird, its transparent sheet rippling beneath its
blimplike body. It was a huge snagger-as big as my own skimmer. I kicked on
the Dragon's tail, dragging it sideways. The Dragon lurched and spun and then
we were directly over the snagger.
I let go of the tail and dropped, my eyes closed.
In a second, something soft rumpled beneath me. I had landed safely atop the
snagger. I opened my eyes as the Dragon-having lost my weight-shot suddenly
upward. I watched it glide away, then looked down at the snagger, my savior. I
patted its wide, rubbery body. My weight was pushing it slowly down, as if I
were riding the balloons in the Angis Tavern. I looked forward

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to a comfortable trip to the ground.
"I like your style, kid."
I jumped, nearly losing my place on the snagger. The voice had come out of
mid-air. Literally.
"You," I said. No more was necessary. He was banking around behind me.
Kwalan Rhiang had returned in his skimmer. He circled easily about me as I
fell toward the treetops. He came in close, smiling, his huge legs pedaling
him on a gentle course. I had to turn my head to keep an eye on him.
"I said before I'd top what Leopold was paying you," he shouted, his thick
voice cutting the high air. "After today, I think I'd pay double. I could use
someone like you."
I felt my face harden. "You bastard. You're responsible for what just
happened. Why would I work for someone who's tried to kill me?"
He shrugged. "Gave you a chance to prove yourself. Come on, you're wasting
your time with Leopold."
"And you're wasting your time with me."
He shrugged again, utterly sure of himself. "As you wish. I gave you a
chance."
I nodded. "Now just go away."
"And leave you to tell Leopold about all this? You don't think I'm going to
let you back alive, do you?"
I froze. Rhiang slid a blaser from its holster at his waist and aimed it at my
head. His grin widened. The muzzle dropped a fraction, and I breathed a little
easier.
"No," he said distantly, "why kill you straight off? Slow deaths are more
interesting, I think. And harder to trace."
He aimed at the snagger. If he punctured it I'd drop into the trees. It was a
long fall. I wouldn't make it.
I growled and grabbed for the gun at my waist, bringing it up before Rhiang
could move. He stared at me for a moment, then started laughing. I looked at
what I was holding.
"What're you going to do with that?" he said. "Bag me?"
It was my bagging-pistol, all right. I'd dropped the blaser back in the Lair.
But it would still serve a purpose.
"Exactly," I said, and fired.
The gray fluid squirted across the narrow gap between us, sealing instantly
over Rhiang's hands. He fired the blaser but succeeded only in melting the bag
enough to let the weapon break away. It fell out of sight.
His eyes were wide. He was considering death by suffocation.
"No," he choked.
But I didn't fire at his head. I put the next bag right over his feet, sealing
the pedal mechanism tight. His legs jerked convulsively. They slowed. Rhiang
began to whimper, and then he was out of control. His skimmer turned and
glided away as he hurried to catch any updraft he could. He vanished behind
Paramount Lair, and was gone.
I turned back to observe the treetops. Rhiang might be back, but I doubted it.
First he'd have a long walk ahead of him, over unpleasant terrain, back to his
base . . . if he could maneuver his skimmer well enough to land in the
treetops, and make the long, painful climb down.
But I didn't worry about it. I watched the thorntrees rise about me, and
presently the snagger brought me gently to the ground. I dismounted, leaving
the snagger to bob back into the air, and began to walk gingerly across the
inhospitable ground, avoiding the spines. A daggerbush snapped at me. I danced
away. It was going to be a rough walk out. Somewhere behind me, Rhiang might
be facing the same problem. And he wanted me dead. But I didn't have as far to
go.

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